Dow Jones Business News: Former Shell 
Chairman Was Told of Reserve Issues 
Mon Mar 8,12:46 AM ET 
LONDON -- The ousted chairman of Royal Dutch/Shell (NYSE:RD - News) Group was 
warned of possible overstatements in the oil titan's petroleum reserves two 
years before he publicly disclosed them, two people familiar with the situation 
told The Wall Street Journal. 
A memo, circulated to Sir Philip Watts and other senior executives in early 
2002, warned that the company's method of booking oil and natural-gas reserves 
appeared to be inconsistent with U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (news - 
web sites) guidelines, these two people said. The memo pointed out that the 
company might have to revise downward its reserve tally by the equivalent of 
about one billion barrels of oil, these people said. 
On Jan. 9, the world's third-largest publicly traded oil company by market value 
announced it would cut its oil and natural-gas reserves by about 20%, or 3.9 
billion barrels of oil equivalent. A good chunk of the overbooking occurred 
during Sir Philip's tenure as the companywide head of exploration and production 
between 1997 and 2001. He became chairman in 2001. 
Just taking the oil portion, the reclassified reserves represent $67.5 billion 
of potential future revenue, assuming moderate oil prices of $25 a barrel. The 
SEC since has launched a formal investigation into the matter. 
Last week, the twin Dutch and British boards of the company ousted Sir Philip 
and a top deputy. The move came after Shell's audit committee briefed directors 
about preliminary findings into the reserve revisions conducted by an internal 
team of investigators and outside counsel. The team found a "trail of 
communications" showing Sir Philip appeared to have known about longstanding 
internal questions over the validity of the reserves bookings, according to one 
of the people familiar with the situation. 
Wall Street Journal Staff Reporters Chip Cummins, Bhushan Bahree in New York and 
Susan Warren in Dallas contributed to this article. 
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/dowjones/20040308/bs_dowjones/200403080046000016